Human Perfection in Aristotle and the Rambam

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Abstract

What makes a human perfect? Beyond merely being a fascinating question to discuss, the
notion of what makes a perfect human being should presumably determine how a person should
live one’s life. In order to strive for a life of perfection, one needs first to understand what it
means to be a perfect human being.
In his work Nichomachean Ethics, Aristotle attempts to answer this question. Oddly,
Aristotle appears to contradict himself in the conclusion of this work. Resolving the apparent
contradiction in the Ethics remains the subject of much debate and scholarship.
Fourteen centuries after Aristotle lived, the Jewish thinker Rabbi Moshe Ben Maimon
revisited this same question. His discussion of this issue takes up a large portion of his celebrated
work, The Guide of the Perplexed. As a religious thinker, it might be expected that the Rambam
would draw his answer directly and solely from the Bible or Rabbinic sources. Yet interestingly,
the discussion in the Guide regarding human perfection follows the same structure as the
discussion in Aristotle’s Nichomachean Ethics. The Rambam’s approach to the issue is clearly
influenced by Aristotle’s work. Yet, despite working with the same approach as Aristotle does,
the Rambam seems to reach a different conclusion.
In this thesis we will analyze where exactly the Rambam veers away from Aristotle’s
position, and why he chooses to do so. We will argue that despite basing his argument mostly on
Aristotle’s thought, the Rambam’s religious perspective does indeed lead him to a different
conclusion. The logical argument of the Guide may take the same form as that in the Ethics, but
the Rambam’s difference in world view leads him to a different conclusion regarding what
makes a human perfect.